FFASJU) is in effect for all of Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Hazardous seas and life- threatening rip currents due to increasing winds and a northerly swell will affect the local waters and most northwest to northeastern coastal areas of the islands through the rest of the week. Variably cloudy skies prevailed through the overnight hours as showers and isolated thunderstorms developed under southerly steering winds across portions of the interior and eastern Puerto Rico. The doppler radar estimated near 1 inch of rain in Orocovis and Cayey after midnight. Minimum temperatures were from the mid 60s across the higher elevations to the mid 70s and low 80s across the lower elevations. Wind gusts were between 16-22 mph across coastal areas. Breezy conditions are expected to prevail across the islands today as low-level wind speed convergence continues over the region. A deep layered polar trough and associated surface low will continue to amplify over the southwestern Atlantic during the next few days. This will promote a deep southerly wind flow and pooling of tropical moisture from South America into the northeastern Caribbean and the Atlantic waters through at least late Wednesday night. Therefore, an unsettled weather pattern is expected with numerous showers and thunderstorm development across the local area. The wettest period is expected from this morning over southern PR, stretching eastward into the Virgin Islands later today, with a second round of flooding rains on Wednesday. The highest accumulations should be for the south, interior, and eastern PR, as well as the U.S. Virgin Islands. The most likely scenario calls for 3 to 6 inches of rainfall for southern/eastern PR and 2-4 for the USVI. Isolated higher amounts are possible through the event. The main impacts are flash flooding and mudslides, but thunderstorms with strong gusty winds are expected as well. By Thursday, a strong surface high pressure over Southeastern USA, and the surface low now over the north central Atlantic will promote a long northerly wind fetch across the western Atlantic into the northeastern Caribbean. This will cause the local winds to turn from the north- northwest and push the plume of moisture further east and away of the local area. The precipitable water content is expected to decrease below normal levels by early Thursday afternoon. However, the upper- level trough axis is expected to cross the local area earlier in the day and the 500 mb temperatures are forecast to drop to around -10C. Therefore, the threat for additional shower and isolated thunderstorm development could last into Thursday morning. .LONG TERM...Friday through Tuesday... A drier and more stable trend is forecasted for the beginning of the long term. Model guidance indicates a more stable pattern at the upper levels as the divergent side of the polar trough moves eastward out of the forecast area, leaving subsidence over the islands and being replaced by ridging. A similar trend is expected at the mid-levels, with the GFS suggesting a broad building mid- level ridge extending from the western Atlantic into the Caribbean. The presence of the mid-level ridge will begin on Friday afternoon and persist for the rest of the period as it stretches into the central Atlantic. The last part of the long-term global model guidance shows some discrepancies between the two solutions, one stable and drier and another stable but with more moisture. According to the GFS, from Friday onwards and for the rest of the forecast period, the islands are expected to be mostly dominated by a building surface high-pressure system extending from the western Atlantic into the Central Atlantic, resulting in northerly winds for Friday and veering winds for the rest of the forecast period. Conversely, the ECMWF solution shows a similar trend with a surface high-pressure system located over the western Atlantic, but from Sunday into Monday, the guide suggests a decent increase in humidity at 850 MB and a weak short-wave trough over the area. As we are still far away in the forecast, the forecast for the last part of the long term reflects a combination of both solutions, resulting in a variable weather pattern, given the presence of the mid-level ridge causing a strong trade wind cap inversion and drier air aloft. && .AVIATION... (06Z TAFS) SCT SHRA/Isold TSRA will develop over PR today, and across portions of the southern and eastern waters of the islands, affecting the USVI terminals at times through the forecast period. Tempo MVFR to brief IFR conditions are possible across all local terminals. Mtn top obscd and BKN/OVC layers through FL100 expected. Low level winds will continue from the south-southwest between 15 to 25 kt with higher gusts near SHRA/TSRA. && .MARINE... The interaction of a deep-layer trough and the broad Atlantic ridge extending into the eastern Caribbean will result in southerly fresh to locally strong winds. This wind-driven sea will create hazardous marine conditions for the Atlantic offshore waters. By midweek, the arrival of a northerly swell will aggravate the situation, resulting in building seas and large breaking waves. The local waters will experience squally marine weather from today through Thursday, resulting in localized hazardous marine conditions. For beachgoers, there is a moderate rip current risk across all the northern coastal areas of Puerto Rico and the local islands. An increase in breaking waves is forecast from late tomorrow into the rest of the workweek. && .SJU WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... PR...Flood Watch through late Wednesday night for PRZ001>013. VI...Flood Watch through late Wednesday night for VIZ001-002. AM...Small Craft Advisory from 2 PM this afternoon to 8 AM AST Monday for AMZ711. Small Craft Advisory from 2 PM this afternoon to 3 AM AST Wednesday for AMZ716-723. Small Craft Advisory from 2 PM this afternoon to 8 PM AST this evening for AMZ726. Small Craft Advisory from 8 PM this evening to 2 AM AST Thursday for AMZ741. && $$ $$